As a college professor, I get exposed to a lot of things. Co-workers that don't cooperate, administrators that don't understand and student that don't want to work for their grades. One thing that irks me the most is students not wanting to give anything back for the amount of work that I pour into my classes. I also get to see students make TONS of mistakes, many self inflicted, and then look for someone else to bail them out. I get to hear all of their excuses: WiFi not working, dog ate my work, dog died, grandmother died...the same grandmother that died last year at this very same time of year, doctor ordered bedrest...for an ingrown toenail. The list goes on and on. Students are always looking for a bailout plan. They create terrible schedules and then expect some administrator to wave a wand and fix what they have done. They slack off for weeks before a test, fail the exam and immediately ask if they can "turn in corrections for bonus points...". They wait until the last minute to check their grades and then realize, "Wow, I am failing this course!" Excuse after excuse, mistake after mistake...and I get to see it all and hear it all. I could write a book and become very rich off it but I refuse to profit off of the apathy and laziness of someone else. It does make for interesting conversation fodder with family and friends though .
So, seeing all of this, I realize why I need Jesus to live within me. I need Jesus so that I will know when to extend mercy and grace and when to execute judgment. My least favorite time of year is issuing grades. The compassionate side of me wants to pass every student because I look for the good in everyone and yet I have to evaluate them based on their works. This is the same principle we see illustrated in 1 Corinthians 3 when believers, not judged to go to hell because they are saved, are judged to receive rewards in heaven based on what they with what God gave them and how they built on the foundation that Jesus Christ is and laid. Every man's work will be tested by fire and found out. I need Jesus so that when the person who's messed up so many times finally gets it right, I can respond with praise and not sarcasm. I need Jesus so that I can give a reality check to the one that has been slacking all semester and decides to get it together with one week of school left. I need Jesus because without Him, I would have lost it by now and may be out of a job! Newspaper reads, "Tuskegee Professor decks student for asking the dumbest question ever..." I need Jesus so that my words will be gracious and my spirit compassionate towards those that have screwed up in the worst way and yet need mercy and not judgment. This is a job that, if done with Jesus, becomes more and more enjoyable by the year. Without Christ, my job would be miserable.
Now, let us all put our own lives in perspective. I can understand, even if it is only slightly, how God feels about us. We screw up constantly, and by our own doing, and we look to God for forgiveness. In His love, He forgives us. In His divinity, He cannot be driven to madness like we humans can. His patience and lovingkindness are everlasting because he realizes that we are but dust (Psalm 103). Does God get exasperated? I don't know. The bible speaks of God getting angry with the Israelites at times for their failure to obey Him so I imagine that at times, we can give God a headache...metaphorically speaking. We also see this in Genesis 6 when God says, point blank, "My Spirit will not strive with man forever." Does God get fed up? Ask Korah and his contingent (Numbers 16) or better yet, ask Noah. Even still, God gave Noah ~120 years to build the ark and hence the people had 120 years to repent!
Ephesians 5:1 says that we should be imitators of God i.e. we should mimic God when showing love to one another. We need Jesus so that we can love the way that God loves and see people as God sees them. Let's pray that we are kind to one another, tender hearted, forgiving each other as God has forgiven each of us.
May God bless each of you during this Christmas season!
Ephesians 4:20-24 (NASB) But you did not learn Christ in this way, if indeed you have heard Him and have been taught in Him, just as truth is in Jesus, that, in reference to your former manner of life, you lay aside the old self, which is being corrupted in accordance with the lusts of deceit, and that you be renewed in the spirit of your mind, and put on the new self, which in the likeness of God has been created in righteousness and holiness of the truth.
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Sunday, October 27, 2013
Remember This...
Lamentations 3:21-23 says this:"Yet this I call to mind and therefore I have hope: Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed, for his compassions never fail. They are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness."
In the text, Jeremiah is suffering. Jeremiah lived during a time of corporate suffering- the Babylonians had come in and ransacked Jerusalem. That desolation is the background of this collection of poems called Lamentations. The sin of the people was being judged. The cities were laid waste. Lamentations was an expression of the grief and the misery that was being experienced during this destructive period in the history of Judah/Jerusalem. It was Jeremiah letting his frustrations out.
The way that the poems are written is interesting- each chapter is written as an acrostic; Chapters 1 and 2 are written in 3 line stanzas. Each stanza begins with a different letter of the Hebrew alphabet- in order. As the alphabet progresses, so does the intensity! This literary device also serves to remind the reader that as you near the end of the alphabet, you are also nearing the resolution of the hurt and pain. Chapter 3 lies between 1,2 and 4,5 and is by far the most intense chapter.
In the midst of the judgment, here was the man of God suffering right along with the rest of the people! He was NOT EXEMPT; and he had been serving God since he was a young boy. Lamentations was written to help the people maintain their faith in God. As one scholar puts it, the ones that did not come to God when Jeremiah was prophesying now had a second chance to hear from God through the prophet. Jeremiah reminded the people that the calamity that came was deserved and that “God was righteous” in His dealings with them.
It is easy to view Lamentations as all doom and gloom book but there are nuggets here for those that have an ear to hear. Some scholars believe that this is the quintessential book on suffering and how to deal with suffering and pain.
Have you ever wondered “why?” “Why am I going through this?” Romans 8:19-23 says that the whole world is under bondage
waiting for the glory of God to be revealed in children of God- but we are
groaning as well- we want to get out of here!
We understand that this tent that we live in can get very uncomfortable
sometimes!
There are different reasons for suffering: 1. Personal sin
2. Purification and 3. So that the glory of God might be seen. No matter how we slice it, issues and problems
are a natural outgrowth of the condition of the world. Adam and Eve’s sin upset the perfection that God initially
intended for the world.
William Dembski (author of “The End of Christianity”) put it very eloquently when he said that man
must experience the full measure of sin because man was complicit in sin
entering into the world; ALL OF US HAVE TO EXPERIENCE THE WORLD AS IT IS- BUT
WE DO NOT HAVE TO LET THOSE EXPERIENCES DEFINE WHO WE ARE. We do not have to live in bitterness because God can take
the pain, loss and hurt and turn them into faith and trust! We are hard pressed but not crushed, perplexed
but not in despair, persecuted but not forsaken, cast down but not destroyed! Thank God for His grace and His mercy!
Suffering may be punishment for some BUT there may be a different
intent for those whose suffering/tribulation cannot be traced back to personal
sin. For the believer, that is trying to
live for Christ and trying to live a holy life, the intent of suffering may simply be to continue to perfect
us i.e. to grow us up
spiritually. James 1:2-4 “Count it all joy when you meet trials knowing that the testing of your faith produces perseverance!” Perseverance is necessary on this walk! Hebrews 10:36 says it like this: you have need of endurance so that AFTER you have done the will of God, you may receive what has been promised.
How do we handle suffering or tribulation? Jeremiah gives us some excellent insight on what to do when we are in a hard place. I love the way that he writes and the metaphors that he uses.
1. Remember This: The pain and the hurt that you feel is real [Verses 16-18]
"He has made my teeth grind on gravel,
and made me cower in ashes; my soul is bereft of peace;
I have forgotten what happiness is; so I say, “My endurance has perished;
so has my hope from the Lord.”
and made me cower in ashes; my soul is bereft of peace;
I have forgotten what happiness is; so I say, “My endurance has perished;
so has my hope from the Lord.”
Jeremiah is brutally honest in his assessment of the
situation. He says here: my soul has no
peace, I have forgotten what happiness is; my endurance has perished and so has
my hope from the Lord. Here is a man that is face to face with his problems and he
shows us something amazing. Rather than
put on a phony face and walk around high-fiving everyone, Jeremiah says here
that I am tired! I don’t even remember
what happiness is! Too many times we
have a grin and bear it attitude- it’s ok for us to admit that we are
tired! I am worn out! We have to be honest about pain and hurt. Pain is a reminder of the fallen condition of
the world! Pain also a reminder that we cannot let go of God! It is at these low points that we should pray
the most fervently! IF we let go of God, what do we have left? Yes the pain is real, yes we need to release
our hurt and frustrations but we cannot ever allow our issues to cause us to
quit on God. Can you imagine having to bear all of your burdens outside
of the grace of God?
2. Remember this: God is good.[Verses 21-24]
In the middle of this lament, roughly halfway through this
chapter, Jeremiah comes back to reality and reminds himself of something
awesome. Every now and then, we need to
REMEMBER what God has done! GOD NEVER FORGETS BUT
WE OFTEN TIMES, DO! Later in the chapter, Jeremiah recalled a
situation where he was thrown into a pit and imprisoned and he says, “I called
on your name, O LORD, from the depths of the pit; You heard my plea…Verse 57 says
“YOU CAME NEAR when I called on you; you said, “DO NOT FEAR!”
God is saying RIGHT NOW: REMEMBER THIS: I HAVE NOT FORSAKEN
YOU!
When we look at verses 21-24, we can pull out 7 principles that can be applied directly to our own lives:
" But this I call to mind, and
therefore I have hope:
The steadfast love of the Lord never
ceases; his
mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is
Your faithfulness. “The Lord is my portion,” says my
soul, “therefore I will hope in him.”
1. (Verse 21) Hope springs from the recollection of WHO God
is and WHAT God has already done. Remind
yourself of this the next time you get tired.
2. (Verse 22) God’s love is steadfast and unending; A
different translation of this passage says this: BECAUSE of the steadfast
love of the LORD, we are not CUT OFF! We are not here because of ourselves, we are here because of God's love.
3. God’s mercy is also eternal; Mercy is when God spares us
from what we deserve.
4. (verse 23) God’s mercy is fresh: every morning, God’s mercy
for us is renewed- every day is a new day from God, one in which the previous
day is not held against us!
5. God’s faithfulness in GREAT; Hebrews 12:28 says that
God’s kingdom is unshakable! The same
writer in chapter 13 says this: Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today and
forever! God has not changed and God
will not changeà
He is one that we can depend on! When we lean on Him, he doesn’t shake, God stays put!
6. (Verse 24) THE LORD IS ENOUGH! The word portion has to do with possession as
in God belongs to us. In Numbers 18:20, God
told the priests, “I am your portion” i.e. I am everything that you need.
7. Because HE is ALL I need, I will hope in HIM. Hope is the expectation of something
sure! Isaiah 49:23 says that those that hope in the
Lord will not be disappointed!
Remember this: The believer understands that God is
ultimately…GOOD.
Remember this: weeping endures for a night but joy comes in
the morning! (Psalm 30:5)
Remember this: these light afflictions which are but for a
moment, and that there is a far more exceeding and eternal weight in glory! (2 Cor 4:17)
Jeremiah reminds the people in verse 37 of chapter 3 that NOTHING
happens outside of God’s providence. It
is the permissive will of God that allows things that we view as bad to
occur. Job asked the question, shall we
accept good from the Lord and not bad? Atheists use this point to discredit God- saying "how can so
much evil exist in the world IF God Is real?" but times when others discredit are
times that we should give glory to God because God is able to take those bad, hurtful things
and turn them around for the good!
3. Remember this: God already knows the outcome; be patient [Verses 25,26]
The way we measure time and the way God measures time is
different. In two places, 2 Peter 3:8;
Psalm 90:4 it says that a thousand years is but a day to God. Many say don’t interpret that literally, but
let’s say that we do… if we lived 70 YEARS, OUR LIFE IS ABOUT 1.5H LONG TO GOD! That’s about the length of a movie! It is hard to wait when we base the outcome of a situation on our wristwatches, but Jeremiah encourages us here:
"
The Lord is good to those who
wait for him,
to the soul who seeks him. It is good that one should wait quietly
for the salvation of the Lord."
to the soul who seeks him. It is good that one should wait quietly
for the salvation of the Lord."
Verse 25 says two things: 1. Wait and 2. Seek. While I am waiting, I should also be SEEKING
God. I need to be looking for Him in the
midst of my trouble. Seek in Hebrew is "dawrash"-
it means to seek the TRUE God in prayer and worship! Throughout this text and
this book, Jeremiah never takes his focus off the true God! SEEKING GOD IS WHAT BRINGS EVERYTHING INTO FOCUS. It helps us to realize that God is there in
the bad times as well as in the good times. Isaiah 26:3 says that God will keep you in perfect peace if
we keep our minds stayed on Him. He says
again in the 40th chapter that if we wait on God, He will renew our
strength!
Verse 26 says that we should wait quietly for the salvation
of the Lord! Is this contradictory to
crying out? No, the crying out was the
vent session! These laments were powerful expressions of grief and loss. However, mow that it is out, and we’ve been reminded of the HOPE that
we have in God, and WE KNOW that his salvation is coming…we know that the
suffering will not last forever…we quiet down with the expectation that God
will rescue us from whatever it is we are dealing with! Psalm 62:1 “…My soul waits in silence for God only; From Him
is my salvation.” Psalm 131:2 “…I have composed and quieted myself… Like a weaned
child rests against his mother, My soul is like a weaned child within me.” I am at peace now! I am full and content because of who God is and what I know He will bring to past.
Paul says in Philippians 4:6,7 that we shouldn’t be anxious for anything
but through prayer and supplication and thanksgiving, present our requests to
the Lord and the PEACE of God, that surpasses all understanding shall guard our
hearts and minds through Christ Jesus!
We all want to be at peace.
We all want that rest that so often eludes us. The beauty of Christianity is that no matter
how much we suffer down here…Jesus has the best Retirement package that has
ever been offered. After we’ve taken all that we can take, Jesus said this in John
14:3” I go to prepare a place for you that where I am, you may be also! He said (John 16), you weep now but you will
see me again and your tears will be turned to joy…and NO ONE will take your joy
away from you. This is not the happy go lucky/pie-in-the-sky show, I’M JUST SAYING THAT
CHRISTIANS DON’T SORROW AS THE WORLD SORROWS BECAUSE WE UNDERSTAND THAT THERE
IS ANOTHER LIFE TO COME AFTER THIS ONE! Revelation 21:4 says that God, on the day of Christ's return will wipe away every tear!
Whatever you are facing right now, remember this: it is real, God is good and God already knows the outcome. Grace and peace be unto you, in Jesus' name.
Sunday, September 22, 2013
An Interesting Thought
So I recently preached a sermon from Judges 6:11-22 concerning Gideon. It amazes me the plethora of ideas and opinions that exist concerning this man. Some call him a coward. Some call him a magician. Some accuse him of having no faith. I simply see him as, well, human.
Gideon was from the smallest clan of the tribe of Manesseh, he was the youngest in his family, he grew up in a family of idolaters, he was unschooled in the ways of God and yet, this is the man that God chose to lead the attack on the Midianites. When God showed up in the winepress, God already knew what to expect.
Gideon was threshing wheat in the winepress to hide from the Midianites. He was obviously fearful as was the rest of Israel as they have began to live in caves. The Midianites and the people of the east would show up at harvest time and destroy the crops and decimate the land. The people were poor and oppressed. Gideon was a most unlikely choice to lead considering the fact that, well, he was afraid. Judging from the book, before Gideon met God at that winepress, he was a naturally timid man. In spite of this glaring weakness, God called him a "mighty man of valor" in verse 12.
Gideon and his experience with God points out something that is critical to understand and deal with in our walk as Christians. The emotion of doubt. Many treat doubt as if it is the worst thing that someone could ever do but have you ever stopped to think that that we are naturally doubtful and skeptical people? Human beings are frail and weak and when anything comes up that we don't understand, doubt will be present. Gideon had two adminitions from the Angel of the Lord in the text and both times he doubted. Let's examine:
12And the angel of the Lord appeared to him and said to him, “The Lord is with you, O mighty man of valor.” 13And Gideon said to him, “Please, sir,a if the Lord is with us, why then has all this happened to us? And where are all his wonderful deeds that our fathers recounted to us, saying, ‘Did not the Lord bring us up from Egypt?’ But now the Lord has forsaken us and given us into the hand of Midian.” 14And the Lordb turned to him and said, “Go in this might of yours and save Israel from the hand of Midian; do not I send you?” 15And he said to him, “Please, Lord, how can I save Israel? Behold, my clan is the weakest in Manasseh, and I am the least in my father’s house.”
Gideon was skeptical and confused because he grew up in that generation that did not know God nor His deeds (see Judges 2). He was also focused on his limitations as opposed to being focused on God. In verse 13, the word "lord" (Hebrew, adon) shows that he also didn't really know who he was talking to. However, in verse 15, he uses the term Lord (Adonai) which indicates to me that God was beginning to reveal Himself to Gideon. Adonai is a term that is reserved for God and basically is used to ascribe to majesty and glory to God; it is used to indicate his mastery over everything.
Let's think about doubt from a new testament perspective. Jesus says in Matthew 21:21, 22 that if we believe (have faith) and do not doubt, whatever we ask will be given to us. Interestingly, this statement is made in the context of man asking something of God. When we ask of God, James says that we should ask without doubting otherwise we are double minded and therefore should not expect anything from God. One word for doubt, "diakrino" (which is the word used in Matt 21) is a Greek legal term which means to "discern two sides" or to "judge". When we begin to wrestle with our flesh, that's where doubt arises. When we start wavering between what we know God is capable of and what our flesh is telling us that He can't do...then we have a problem. However, doubt is normal. What we must avoid is that doubt pushing us to unbelief, which is the absence of faith.
Now, let's think about this from the other side. When we ask God for something, we should not doubt. However, what about when God asks somethings of us? As is the case for Gideon. God is saying to him, you are going to deliver Israel from the Midianites. Gideon's skepticism is natural because he is a timid man that had not done ANYTHING to thwart the Midianite oppression for the seven years that it had been going on. He was content to hide in the winepress threshing wheat. The funny thing is, when God came to Gideon He already knew every excuse that Gideon would make. He knew every hoop that Gideon would jump through. But God was patient with Gideon because, I believe, he wanted to move Gideon to faith.
If you read the text further, you will see that when Gideon wanted to prepare an offering to confirm If he had "found favor" in the sight of the Angel of the Lord, the Angel waited patiently for him. This is a picture of God's patience with us. Is God averse to is asking questions when we are confused about what He's doing in our lives? I think not. He's well able to answer anything that we ask. Is it wrong for us to ask for confirmation? The funny thing is, many think that Gideon was trying to manipulate God. God was actually manipulating Gideon because with every answered question, Gideon was moved closer and closer to carrying out what God had purposed when He showed up at the winepress.
Am I saying that we should walk in doubt and fear? Am I saying that we are terrible if we ask questions? No, what I am saying is that doubt is a human emotion that we will all struggle with and God has the answer and He is not afraid to erase our doubts with His grace and patience. I think that sometimes people are overzealous in their treatment of Gideon. They are either too hyped up about him or too hard on him. He's human just like all of the others in the Bible that doubted (see Moses, Jeremiah, Peter, Thomas, etc.). If you are struggling with doubt, pray that God would erase them and pray for answers to your unanswered questions. Let God, by His grace, patience and answers, move you to trust and faith in Him. Grace and peace to you from God the Father and Lord of all.
Gideon was from the smallest clan of the tribe of Manesseh, he was the youngest in his family, he grew up in a family of idolaters, he was unschooled in the ways of God and yet, this is the man that God chose to lead the attack on the Midianites. When God showed up in the winepress, God already knew what to expect.
Gideon was threshing wheat in the winepress to hide from the Midianites. He was obviously fearful as was the rest of Israel as they have began to live in caves. The Midianites and the people of the east would show up at harvest time and destroy the crops and decimate the land. The people were poor and oppressed. Gideon was a most unlikely choice to lead considering the fact that, well, he was afraid. Judging from the book, before Gideon met God at that winepress, he was a naturally timid man. In spite of this glaring weakness, God called him a "mighty man of valor" in verse 12.
Gideon and his experience with God points out something that is critical to understand and deal with in our walk as Christians. The emotion of doubt. Many treat doubt as if it is the worst thing that someone could ever do but have you ever stopped to think that that we are naturally doubtful and skeptical people? Human beings are frail and weak and when anything comes up that we don't understand, doubt will be present. Gideon had two adminitions from the Angel of the Lord in the text and both times he doubted. Let's examine:
12And the angel of the Lord appeared to him and said to him, “The Lord is with you, O mighty man of valor.” 13And Gideon said to him, “Please, sir,a if the Lord is with us, why then has all this happened to us? And where are all his wonderful deeds that our fathers recounted to us, saying, ‘Did not the Lord bring us up from Egypt?’ But now the Lord has forsaken us and given us into the hand of Midian.” 14And the Lordb turned to him and said, “Go in this might of yours and save Israel from the hand of Midian; do not I send you?” 15And he said to him, “Please, Lord, how can I save Israel? Behold, my clan is the weakest in Manasseh, and I am the least in my father’s house.”
Gideon was skeptical and confused because he grew up in that generation that did not know God nor His deeds (see Judges 2). He was also focused on his limitations as opposed to being focused on God. In verse 13, the word "lord" (Hebrew, adon) shows that he also didn't really know who he was talking to. However, in verse 15, he uses the term Lord (Adonai) which indicates to me that God was beginning to reveal Himself to Gideon. Adonai is a term that is reserved for God and basically is used to ascribe to majesty and glory to God; it is used to indicate his mastery over everything.
Let's think about doubt from a new testament perspective. Jesus says in Matthew 21:21, 22 that if we believe (have faith) and do not doubt, whatever we ask will be given to us. Interestingly, this statement is made in the context of man asking something of God. When we ask of God, James says that we should ask without doubting otherwise we are double minded and therefore should not expect anything from God. One word for doubt, "diakrino" (which is the word used in Matt 21) is a Greek legal term which means to "discern two sides" or to "judge". When we begin to wrestle with our flesh, that's where doubt arises. When we start wavering between what we know God is capable of and what our flesh is telling us that He can't do...then we have a problem. However, doubt is normal. What we must avoid is that doubt pushing us to unbelief, which is the absence of faith.
Now, let's think about this from the other side. When we ask God for something, we should not doubt. However, what about when God asks somethings of us? As is the case for Gideon. God is saying to him, you are going to deliver Israel from the Midianites. Gideon's skepticism is natural because he is a timid man that had not done ANYTHING to thwart the Midianite oppression for the seven years that it had been going on. He was content to hide in the winepress threshing wheat. The funny thing is, when God came to Gideon He already knew every excuse that Gideon would make. He knew every hoop that Gideon would jump through. But God was patient with Gideon because, I believe, he wanted to move Gideon to faith.
If you read the text further, you will see that when Gideon wanted to prepare an offering to confirm If he had "found favor" in the sight of the Angel of the Lord, the Angel waited patiently for him. This is a picture of God's patience with us. Is God averse to is asking questions when we are confused about what He's doing in our lives? I think not. He's well able to answer anything that we ask. Is it wrong for us to ask for confirmation? The funny thing is, many think that Gideon was trying to manipulate God. God was actually manipulating Gideon because with every answered question, Gideon was moved closer and closer to carrying out what God had purposed when He showed up at the winepress.
Am I saying that we should walk in doubt and fear? Am I saying that we are terrible if we ask questions? No, what I am saying is that doubt is a human emotion that we will all struggle with and God has the answer and He is not afraid to erase our doubts with His grace and patience. I think that sometimes people are overzealous in their treatment of Gideon. They are either too hyped up about him or too hard on him. He's human just like all of the others in the Bible that doubted (see Moses, Jeremiah, Peter, Thomas, etc.). If you are struggling with doubt, pray that God would erase them and pray for answers to your unanswered questions. Let God, by His grace, patience and answers, move you to trust and faith in Him. Grace and peace to you from God the Father and Lord of all.
Why, Why, Why?
This is meant to be a very short post to vent my frustration. I am simply fed up with Microsoft Windows 8. WHY DID YOU RELEASE A PRODUCT WITH SO MANY BUGS?! WHY DID YOU RELEASE A PRODUCT THAT NEEDS UPDATING AND PATCHING EVERY SINGLE DAY? If it was unfinished, you should have kept it in the lab- you have zero competition in the PC market. I don't need my cellphone to match my computer. I don't need an apps page and a desktop! I don't need a computer that crashes every 3-5 minutes when I run programs that use a lot of memory. It simply makes no sense. Please, in the future, be practical and not cute. This is annoying and it is by far the WORST experience that I have ever had with any windows operating system. You should have stopped at 7 and left it there. Windows 7 runs beautifully. It recovers documents, it autosaves, it just works. Why fix what is not broken? Just a dumb move all around. Have you experienced this? I wish I could call Bill Gates personally. Ok, I am done ranting...for now. Lol!
Be blessed.
Be blessed.
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
Justifiable Homicide
In the criminal justice world, there are times when homicide is a non-punishable offense. Say for instance, if your life is in imminent danger and you protect yourself. The legal dictionary defines justifiable homicide as: "a killing without evil or criminal intent, for which there can be no blame, such as self-defense to protect oneself or to protect another, or the shooting by a law enforcement officer in fulfilling his/her duties" (The People's Law Dictionary. S.v. "Justifiable homicide." Retrieved 9/9/2013 from http://legaldictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Justifiable+homicide).
I submit to you today that there is a justifiable homicide that must take place each and everyday in the life of the believer. Galatians 5:24 says this: "And those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires." The verb is in the aorist tense which denotes a once and for all action. Think of the imagery here. Think of how painful a crucifixion is. Now, think of how difficult it is for us as Christians to walk the narrow path, the sacrifices that we must make, the things that we are to separate ourselves from.
So, why does this once and for all action not result in instant perfection? I mean, if we have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires, why is it that the flesh continues to operate? The Romans designed crucifixion to induce maximum pain and slow death. It was not intended for one to die instantly, but to drag the process of death out. Many hung on crosses for days before finally succumbing to death. So, while the flesh has been crucified, it is stubborn and does not die easily! That's the most frustrating thing about trying to live a holy life but it is also a reminder that the one Who began the good work will also bring it to completion.
Because the flesh is slow to die and because sin is constantly trying to find a breach in the armor, this is something that we must do every day. We must put the flesh on the cross each and every day that we wake up. It is justifiable homicide because the flesh is set against the Spirit and is therefore in direct contradiction with God. The flesh and the carnal mindset is set on death and therefore we must crucify it before it kills us! If we follow the passions and desires of the flesh which only seeks to gratify itself, we will eventually be led to destruction. We are told by Jesus that we must pick our cross up every day (Luke 9:23). Although we are created in God's image, sin has distorted the image and the flesh is in constant rebellion against the Living God.
Don't take this as some sort of legalism or works based religiosity. The flesh does not always, as we have been conditioned to think, have to do with sex. We might have a desire to do harm to our neighbor or to lie to stay out of trouble, or share the latest gossip...the word flesh is not always pertaining to sex. Passions and desires are simply strong emotions and depending on the motivation for those emotions, they can be negative or positive. Here, we are talking in the negative sense because it is the flesh or the sinful nature that creates these passions. If God is the motivating force behind a passion or a desire, then it is by default positive because God is always good and God cannot tempt us to sin (James 1:13).
So, how do I put the flesh on the cross every day? How difficult will it be? Well, that depends on who is doing the crucifying. If I try to do it in my own strength, it will never happen. Although the verb is in the active voice, we cannot do this alone. The active voice means that it is an action that is completed by the subject so we must take the initiative to carry the act of crucifying the flesh out but the true renewal comes from God's Spirit. We crucify the flesh by "walking by the Spirit" (Galatians 5:16). Walking simply means the way that we live our life. We are to live life submitted to the Holy Spirit and walk according to His guidance. When we do that, the Holy Spirit is able to steer us away from sin, away from danger and keep us from gratifying the desires of the flesh. The verb walk in verse 16 is active but it is also imperative! We MUST walk by the Spirit if we have any hope of crucifying the flesh. We have to live in submission to the Spirit at all times. Will we mess it up at times? Yes, but we have to be active participant in walking by the Spirit.
Let me share something with you about the flesh, it will not die as long as we keep it on life support. As long as we throw the flesh a bone every now and then, it will remain content and exert as much influence as we allow. We feed our desires through what we consume visually and audibly and the temptation that we give in to. When the Holy Spirit is speaking, don't shut Him out! When there is something that you know is arousing or stimulating to the flesh, remove it or remove yourself. My prayer is that we all would become increasingly obedient and submissive to the Holy Ghost. Grace and Peace my brothers and sisters, in Jesus name!
I submit to you today that there is a justifiable homicide that must take place each and everyday in the life of the believer. Galatians 5:24 says this: "And those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires." The verb is in the aorist tense which denotes a once and for all action. Think of the imagery here. Think of how painful a crucifixion is. Now, think of how difficult it is for us as Christians to walk the narrow path, the sacrifices that we must make, the things that we are to separate ourselves from.
So, why does this once and for all action not result in instant perfection? I mean, if we have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires, why is it that the flesh continues to operate? The Romans designed crucifixion to induce maximum pain and slow death. It was not intended for one to die instantly, but to drag the process of death out. Many hung on crosses for days before finally succumbing to death. So, while the flesh has been crucified, it is stubborn and does not die easily! That's the most frustrating thing about trying to live a holy life but it is also a reminder that the one Who began the good work will also bring it to completion.
Because the flesh is slow to die and because sin is constantly trying to find a breach in the armor, this is something that we must do every day. We must put the flesh on the cross each and every day that we wake up. It is justifiable homicide because the flesh is set against the Spirit and is therefore in direct contradiction with God. The flesh and the carnal mindset is set on death and therefore we must crucify it before it kills us! If we follow the passions and desires of the flesh which only seeks to gratify itself, we will eventually be led to destruction. We are told by Jesus that we must pick our cross up every day (Luke 9:23). Although we are created in God's image, sin has distorted the image and the flesh is in constant rebellion against the Living God.
Don't take this as some sort of legalism or works based religiosity. The flesh does not always, as we have been conditioned to think, have to do with sex. We might have a desire to do harm to our neighbor or to lie to stay out of trouble, or share the latest gossip...the word flesh is not always pertaining to sex. Passions and desires are simply strong emotions and depending on the motivation for those emotions, they can be negative or positive. Here, we are talking in the negative sense because it is the flesh or the sinful nature that creates these passions. If God is the motivating force behind a passion or a desire, then it is by default positive because God is always good and God cannot tempt us to sin (James 1:13).
So, how do I put the flesh on the cross every day? How difficult will it be? Well, that depends on who is doing the crucifying. If I try to do it in my own strength, it will never happen. Although the verb is in the active voice, we cannot do this alone. The active voice means that it is an action that is completed by the subject so we must take the initiative to carry the act of crucifying the flesh out but the true renewal comes from God's Spirit. We crucify the flesh by "walking by the Spirit" (Galatians 5:16). Walking simply means the way that we live our life. We are to live life submitted to the Holy Spirit and walk according to His guidance. When we do that, the Holy Spirit is able to steer us away from sin, away from danger and keep us from gratifying the desires of the flesh. The verb walk in verse 16 is active but it is also imperative! We MUST walk by the Spirit if we have any hope of crucifying the flesh. We have to live in submission to the Spirit at all times. Will we mess it up at times? Yes, but we have to be active participant in walking by the Spirit.
Let me share something with you about the flesh, it will not die as long as we keep it on life support. As long as we throw the flesh a bone every now and then, it will remain content and exert as much influence as we allow. We feed our desires through what we consume visually and audibly and the temptation that we give in to. When the Holy Spirit is speaking, don't shut Him out! When there is something that you know is arousing or stimulating to the flesh, remove it or remove yourself. My prayer is that we all would become increasingly obedient and submissive to the Holy Ghost. Grace and Peace my brothers and sisters, in Jesus name!
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
Limited Faith, Unlimited God
Haitus over, lol. Sorry for the drought but I have been in a holding pattern lately. Not that I haven't had things on my mind but I haven't had the time to blog! My job has exploded and I spend most of my days with someone in my face asking for something. This particular post has been marinating for a while.
In the sixth chapter of Mark's gospel, Jesus returns home to Nazareth and when we look at the parallel gospel accounts in Matthew and Luke, we can begin to see the details of this event. He came to the synagogue to teach as was His custom. He took the scroll of the prophet Isaiah and read from what we now know as the 61st chapter. He read these words (Luke 4:18,19):
"The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me because He has anointed me to bring the good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, and to proclaim the favorable year of the Lord."
He followed this by saying "today, this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing". By reading this particular scripture, Jesus was essentially saying that He was God! The different gospel accounts all say something similar. Initially the people spoke well of Jesus. They claimed that he did all things well and he spoke with power and authority. But then in Mark's gospel, they sort of turned on Him. They began to question His genealogy saying that He was the son of the carpenter, by saying that his mother and his brothers and sisters were among them and by basically refusing to recognize His deity. Reading Luke further, you can see why they started tripping. He basically called them out for their faithlessness and they eventually drove him to the brink of a cliff before he walked through them without being touched.
The Jews were expecting the Messiah to come as a military conqueror considering the fact that they were oppressed by the Romans. Prior to this period they were under the thumb of the Egyptians, the Midianites, the Babylonians and/or the Assyrians. They were looking for an earthly redemption but Moses said that God would send a prophet from among them (Deuteronomy 18).
It is easy to get into a self-help gospel and start talking about the people's perception of Jesus but their perception had nothing to do with anything. He lived among them for His entire life. He undoubtedly worked among them as an apprentice to Joseph (for a great read, check out "The Hidden Years at Nazareth" by G. Campbell Morgan) and He worshipped with them every Sabbath in the synagogue. Nazareth was a poor place with a bad reputation so there was no way that anyone could afford to look down their nose at anyone. The consternation regarding who Jesus was kin to was less about their perception of Him and more of an excuse for their unbelief! They were not interested in Jesus as God, they wanted to see a sign or a work.
Their refusal to follow the evidence caused them to get hung up on the circumstantial. Jesus did things that have never been done since the beginning of time (see John 9) i.e. open blind eyes, and unstop deaf ears. It was evident that He did not work on His own initiative and He even said he same on many occasions (John 5:19).
The passage that He read was also very telling. The favorable year of the Lord is the Jubilee year (see Leviticus 25). In the Jubilee year, the 50th year after 7 sabbaticals (every 7th year was a sabbatical year where the land was left fallow and no planting took place) several things happened: ALL slaves were freed, all dispossessed people were given their land back and more importantly, anyone that owed any debt was freed from their obligation to pay! Let's put this in terms of salvation: the Jubilee year that Jesus ushered in represented the cancelling of the sin debt of all who would trust Jesus as Savior! Jesus ushered in the year of God's favor by coming to cancel the debt to God that our sins created!
However, the unbelief of the people was so deep that they caused Jesus to marvel! These people made Jesus say, "wow!" Don't get me wrong, Jesus is 100% God and is omniscient, but the human side of the hypostatic union had to certainly shake His head in disbelief. Because of their unbelief, the bible says that he could do no miracles there! He laid His hands on a few sick people. Does this mean that Christ was limited? Absolutely NOT! The inability of Jesus to perform any miracles had more to do with the people not believing enough to come to Him. God has unlimited power. The first five chapters of Mark's gospel are full of miracles. So much so that Jesus' fame spread throughout all the land (Mark 1:28). These people were in the immediate presence of the Unlimited God but their faith was so limited that He did not do there what He had done in other places.
Luke's account tells of Jesus saying to the people, "you will no doubt say to Me, physician, heal yourself...do here what you have done elsewhere..." and Jesus made mention of Gentile people that received God's grace in lieu of Israelites that could have received the same thing.
God can do anything that He wants to, but God operates in faith. When we persist in unbelief and refuse to follow the evidence that God is who He says He is, we bind ourselves and limit God to what we think He can do. We put God in a box when He is so much greater! If there is something that you are dealing with and you are having issues with faith, it is my prayer that you would check God's record and see that He has never failed. Don't bind God up with bandages of unbelief! Don't limit God to only what your mind has the ability to conceptualize. Let God be God and the rest will work together for the good. Grace and peace!
In the sixth chapter of Mark's gospel, Jesus returns home to Nazareth and when we look at the parallel gospel accounts in Matthew and Luke, we can begin to see the details of this event. He came to the synagogue to teach as was His custom. He took the scroll of the prophet Isaiah and read from what we now know as the 61st chapter. He read these words (Luke 4:18,19):
"The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me because He has anointed me to bring the good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, and to proclaim the favorable year of the Lord."
He followed this by saying "today, this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing". By reading this particular scripture, Jesus was essentially saying that He was God! The different gospel accounts all say something similar. Initially the people spoke well of Jesus. They claimed that he did all things well and he spoke with power and authority. But then in Mark's gospel, they sort of turned on Him. They began to question His genealogy saying that He was the son of the carpenter, by saying that his mother and his brothers and sisters were among them and by basically refusing to recognize His deity. Reading Luke further, you can see why they started tripping. He basically called them out for their faithlessness and they eventually drove him to the brink of a cliff before he walked through them without being touched.
The Jews were expecting the Messiah to come as a military conqueror considering the fact that they were oppressed by the Romans. Prior to this period they were under the thumb of the Egyptians, the Midianites, the Babylonians and/or the Assyrians. They were looking for an earthly redemption but Moses said that God would send a prophet from among them (Deuteronomy 18).
It is easy to get into a self-help gospel and start talking about the people's perception of Jesus but their perception had nothing to do with anything. He lived among them for His entire life. He undoubtedly worked among them as an apprentice to Joseph (for a great read, check out "The Hidden Years at Nazareth" by G. Campbell Morgan) and He worshipped with them every Sabbath in the synagogue. Nazareth was a poor place with a bad reputation so there was no way that anyone could afford to look down their nose at anyone. The consternation regarding who Jesus was kin to was less about their perception of Him and more of an excuse for their unbelief! They were not interested in Jesus as God, they wanted to see a sign or a work.
Their refusal to follow the evidence caused them to get hung up on the circumstantial. Jesus did things that have never been done since the beginning of time (see John 9) i.e. open blind eyes, and unstop deaf ears. It was evident that He did not work on His own initiative and He even said he same on many occasions (John 5:19).
The passage that He read was also very telling. The favorable year of the Lord is the Jubilee year (see Leviticus 25). In the Jubilee year, the 50th year after 7 sabbaticals (every 7th year was a sabbatical year where the land was left fallow and no planting took place) several things happened: ALL slaves were freed, all dispossessed people were given their land back and more importantly, anyone that owed any debt was freed from their obligation to pay! Let's put this in terms of salvation: the Jubilee year that Jesus ushered in represented the cancelling of the sin debt of all who would trust Jesus as Savior! Jesus ushered in the year of God's favor by coming to cancel the debt to God that our sins created!
However, the unbelief of the people was so deep that they caused Jesus to marvel! These people made Jesus say, "wow!" Don't get me wrong, Jesus is 100% God and is omniscient, but the human side of the hypostatic union had to certainly shake His head in disbelief. Because of their unbelief, the bible says that he could do no miracles there! He laid His hands on a few sick people. Does this mean that Christ was limited? Absolutely NOT! The inability of Jesus to perform any miracles had more to do with the people not believing enough to come to Him. God has unlimited power. The first five chapters of Mark's gospel are full of miracles. So much so that Jesus' fame spread throughout all the land (Mark 1:28). These people were in the immediate presence of the Unlimited God but their faith was so limited that He did not do there what He had done in other places.
Luke's account tells of Jesus saying to the people, "you will no doubt say to Me, physician, heal yourself...do here what you have done elsewhere..." and Jesus made mention of Gentile people that received God's grace in lieu of Israelites that could have received the same thing.
God can do anything that He wants to, but God operates in faith. When we persist in unbelief and refuse to follow the evidence that God is who He says He is, we bind ourselves and limit God to what we think He can do. We put God in a box when He is so much greater! If there is something that you are dealing with and you are having issues with faith, it is my prayer that you would check God's record and see that He has never failed. Don't bind God up with bandages of unbelief! Don't limit God to only what your mind has the ability to conceptualize. Let God be God and the rest will work together for the good. Grace and peace!
Saturday, June 29, 2013
Where Did We Go Wrong?
Have you ever found it difficult to talk to someone about God? You know, someone that is down on their luck, someone in a bind, someone in trouble...and what you have to offer them might not meet their immediate needs? I have been here before. Why do you think that is? Mainly because when we talk about God, we speak of One that no man has seen or can see (1 Tim 6:16; John 1:18; 1 John 4:12) and at that moment the person in question might just need something tangible. Let me ask this, have you ever felt that offering God to someone was simply not adequate...like, "I wish there was something more that I could give?"
I have felt this way at times and I often wondered why. It dawned on me that the reason we feel so inadequate is because we focus on the physical needs of people without ever wondering if their soul is saved. We want to come with a package deal of an instant fix and salvation at the same time. This is because we live in a consumer driven society and really, no one wants to merely hear words- they want something else with it. Surely, mission work, feeding the poor, assistance for the downtrodden, helps ministries, etc. are a vital part of the church but the first mission of the church is to preach the gospel.
I submit today that, in many cases, Christianity has shifted from giving those in need the hope of a resurrection to a "self-help" genie-in-a-bottle mentality and it has people looking for stuff rather than looking for God. Hebrews 6:19 says that the "hope" is an anchor for the soul. 1 Peter 1:3,4 says this those that have accepted Christ are given a "living hope" with the promise of an incorruptible, unfading inheritance that is stored up in heaven. 1 Corinthians 15:19 sums it all up neatly, " If only for this life we have hope in Christ, we are of all people most to be pitied." These three scriptures remind us not to store up treasure here on earth nor to promise those that we are trying to lead to Christ that treasure! These scriptures remind us that the old soldiers of the faith did not look on the things that were temporary but to those things that are eternal! They tell us that the hope is not of houses, cars, great jobs or boatloads of money...the hope that was promised was the hope of a resurrection and eternal life.
Old Christians had a singular focus...heaven. They lived as "sojourners" by faith knowing that this was not the final destination. Let's see what Hebrews 11 has to say and be encouraged by it:
Hebrews 11: 13-16 "All these people were still living by faith when they died. They did not receive the things promised; they only saw them and welcomed them from a distance, admitting that they were foreigners and strangers on earth. People who say such things show that they are looking for a country of their own. If they had been thinking of the country they had left, they would have had opportunity to return. Instead, they were longing for a better country—a heavenly one. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God, for he has prepared a city for them."
This is one powerful passage of scripture that smashes the whole theology of consumerism and accumulation. These people looked to the true purpose of their redemption, heaven! Many died or were martyred before ever seeing what God had promised them. There is a final salvation saved up for the last days where Christ will return and gather up all of his children (1 Peter 1:9). Peter says it best when he tells those that he's writing to that "though you don't see Him, you love Him..." Can we get back to that? Can we love God although we don't physically "see" him [although the earth speaks of Him every day, see Psalms 19, Romans 1]. While these folks were awaiting heaven, they weren't sitting idly by either! They were loving one another, helping each other, meeting together to exhort one another (Hebrews 10:23-26) and in the process, spreading the gospel to the world, even at the expense of their own lives. They were loving their neighbors telling them the good news, that one day all suffering will end for those that are in Christ! They were giving the gospel and introducing people to Jesus because they did not have silver or gold to give (Acts 3:6)! They were sharing the "worlds goods" (1 John 3:17) with one another as they had need (Acts 4:32-37).
So, don't fall into the trap of consumerism. Are there blessings associated with following the Lord? Absolutely. But that's not why we signed up, at least that should not have been our motivation. I accepted Christ because I realized that my soul was in peril and there was no way that I could pay the debt that my sins had created. That's what drew me to Christ, knowing that he paid my sin debt in full and that I couldn't pay it no matter what I offered! That's what we need to get back to; saving souls and fixing our eyes on things above, not on the things of the earth (Colossians 3:2). If it is possible to assist someone with a needs, please do not hesitate to do so but never feel like God is not enough or that merely witnessing to someone about His goodness is inadequate. He is more than enough. He earned the name Jireh because He is the Great Provider. He blesses those that follow Him (Psalm 84:11) but the primary goal of the believer should be heaven, not material blessings. Hope in those things that we cannot see (Romans 8:25) and be steadfast and immovable, always abounding in the works of the Lord knowing that our labor is not in vain (1 Corinthians 15:58). May the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and peace that surpasses all understanding be with you all.
I have felt this way at times and I often wondered why. It dawned on me that the reason we feel so inadequate is because we focus on the physical needs of people without ever wondering if their soul is saved. We want to come with a package deal of an instant fix and salvation at the same time. This is because we live in a consumer driven society and really, no one wants to merely hear words- they want something else with it. Surely, mission work, feeding the poor, assistance for the downtrodden, helps ministries, etc. are a vital part of the church but the first mission of the church is to preach the gospel.
I submit today that, in many cases, Christianity has shifted from giving those in need the hope of a resurrection to a "self-help" genie-in-a-bottle mentality and it has people looking for stuff rather than looking for God. Hebrews 6:19 says that the "hope" is an anchor for the soul. 1 Peter 1:3,4 says this those that have accepted Christ are given a "living hope" with the promise of an incorruptible, unfading inheritance that is stored up in heaven. 1 Corinthians 15:19 sums it all up neatly, " If only for this life we have hope in Christ, we are of all people most to be pitied." These three scriptures remind us not to store up treasure here on earth nor to promise those that we are trying to lead to Christ that treasure! These scriptures remind us that the old soldiers of the faith did not look on the things that were temporary but to those things that are eternal! They tell us that the hope is not of houses, cars, great jobs or boatloads of money...the hope that was promised was the hope of a resurrection and eternal life.
Old Christians had a singular focus...heaven. They lived as "sojourners" by faith knowing that this was not the final destination. Let's see what Hebrews 11 has to say and be encouraged by it:
Hebrews 11: 13-16 "All these people were still living by faith when they died. They did not receive the things promised; they only saw them and welcomed them from a distance, admitting that they were foreigners and strangers on earth. People who say such things show that they are looking for a country of their own. If they had been thinking of the country they had left, they would have had opportunity to return. Instead, they were longing for a better country—a heavenly one. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God, for he has prepared a city for them."
This is one powerful passage of scripture that smashes the whole theology of consumerism and accumulation. These people looked to the true purpose of their redemption, heaven! Many died or were martyred before ever seeing what God had promised them. There is a final salvation saved up for the last days where Christ will return and gather up all of his children (1 Peter 1:9). Peter says it best when he tells those that he's writing to that "though you don't see Him, you love Him..." Can we get back to that? Can we love God although we don't physically "see" him [although the earth speaks of Him every day, see Psalms 19, Romans 1]. While these folks were awaiting heaven, they weren't sitting idly by either! They were loving one another, helping each other, meeting together to exhort one another (Hebrews 10:23-26) and in the process, spreading the gospel to the world, even at the expense of their own lives. They were loving their neighbors telling them the good news, that one day all suffering will end for those that are in Christ! They were giving the gospel and introducing people to Jesus because they did not have silver or gold to give (Acts 3:6)! They were sharing the "worlds goods" (1 John 3:17) with one another as they had need (Acts 4:32-37).
So, don't fall into the trap of consumerism. Are there blessings associated with following the Lord? Absolutely. But that's not why we signed up, at least that should not have been our motivation. I accepted Christ because I realized that my soul was in peril and there was no way that I could pay the debt that my sins had created. That's what drew me to Christ, knowing that he paid my sin debt in full and that I couldn't pay it no matter what I offered! That's what we need to get back to; saving souls and fixing our eyes on things above, not on the things of the earth (Colossians 3:2). If it is possible to assist someone with a needs, please do not hesitate to do so but never feel like God is not enough or that merely witnessing to someone about His goodness is inadequate. He is more than enough. He earned the name Jireh because He is the Great Provider. He blesses those that follow Him (Psalm 84:11) but the primary goal of the believer should be heaven, not material blessings. Hope in those things that we cannot see (Romans 8:25) and be steadfast and immovable, always abounding in the works of the Lord knowing that our labor is not in vain (1 Corinthians 15:58). May the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and peace that surpasses all understanding be with you all.
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